Majority of House Democrats back a Trump impeachment inquiry, adding pressure to Nancy Pelosi to act

WASHINGTON – Most House Democrats say they support launching impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump, a milestone that adds pressure on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to begin the process of trying to oust the president.

Florida Rep. Ted Deutch's announcement Thursday to back an impeachment inquiry and California Rep. Salud Carbajal's similar pronouncement Friday means that the number of House Democrats supporting the process has risen to at least 118 members, or a majority of the 235-member caucus.

“If anyone else did these things, they would face legal consequences,” Carbajal said in his impeachment statement Friday. “I’ve read the full Mueller Report' the president knew the rules and he broke them – he cannot be above the law.”

The report, released in April, said Trump might have obstructed justice on 10 separate occasions but did not conclude Trump committed a crime nor did it exonerate him.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been reluctant to start impeachment proceedings against President Trump.

The roster does not include Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton of Washington, D.C., who supports impeachment but does not have the power to vote on the floor, or Rep. Justin Amash, the Michigan Republican turned independent who supports impeachment.

Pelosi has been reluctant to start impeachment proceedings, preferring to continue the investigations various House committees launched into the president's financial records, his business dealings and the evidence supporting Mueller's conclusions.

“To protect our democracy and our Constitution, Democrats in the Congress continue to legislate, investigate and litigate," Pelosi said in a statement released Friday. “In America, no one is above the law. The President will be held accountable.”

She has the backing of Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, who chairs the House Oversight and Reform Committee investigating the president's finances.

"We are doing our research. We are trying to do our jobs. And there may very well come a time when impeachment is appropriate," he said Saturday during the dedication of a park in his Baltimore district. "I've said many times that one of the lines for me would be when and if the administration disobeys court orders, because I think then we would have no choice."

The House voted last month to kill a measure seeking to impeach Trump – the first vote on such a measure since Democrats took the majority and since the release of Mueller's report.

Even if the measure got through the House, the Republican-controlled Senate would be unlikely to take it up. Some Democrats fear that such an outcome would be seized on by Trump as vindication that the effort was meritless and give him a victory heading into the 2020 election.

Voters don't seem too keen on impeachment, either.

A POLITICO/Morning Consult poll immediately after Mueller’s congressional testimony found that 37% of voters said Congress should begin impeachment proceedings, compared with 46% who said it shouldn't and 16% who were undecided.